Exempt Employee Furlough and FairPay Regulations
February 11th, 2009 Posted by MadisonIn an effort to reduce costs, many employers are considering furloughs – unpaid leave – for exempt employees. However, furloughs can be a legal minefield, if not handled properly, according to the SHRM, the Society of Human Resource Management.
According to the U.S. Department of Labor regulations issued in 2007, an exempt salaried employee is entitled to his or her full salary in any week in which the employee does any work at all – regardless of the number of hours that the employee works.
Under the federal FairPay regulations , an exempt employee who works for 10 minutes during the week is entitled to the same salary as if he or she worked 100 hours during the week.
Also under the FairPay regulations, if an exempt employee is ready, willing and able to work on a particular day, but no work is available, the employer must pay the worker for that day. For example, if the business in Kentucky is closed by a massive power outage, exempt employees must still be paid for that day. Hourly or non-exempt salaried employees need not be paid, under the FLSA or Fair Labor Standards Act.
This means that an employer cannot furlough an exempt employee (more…)
Federal Fixed Workweek Regulations
January 30th, 2009 Posted by AmeliaThe U.S. Department of Labor or DOL announced on January 15, 2009 that Sandia Corp. has agreed to pay more than $2 million in back wages for unpaid overtime.
In an interesting wrinkle, the Albuquerque employer apparently tried to avoid overtime payments for non-exempt employees by setting no fixed payroll week.
Under the federal FLSA or Fair Labor Standards Act, employers must pay an employee overtime when the employee works more than 40 hours in the payroll week.
Information on the FLSA requirements for overtime are included on the federal minimum wage poster that every employer must prominently display in the workplace.
By not having a fixed payroll week, Sandia averaged the employees’ hours over two or more weeks. Under the FLSA, an employer can establish any fixed payroll week that the employer likes. The payroll week can run from Sunday to Saturday, or from Monday to Sunday, or from Thursday to Wednesday. Under some circumstances, an employer can change the payroll week, as long as employees are given advance notice.
However, the employee’s workweek must be a fixed and regularly recurring period of 168 hours, (more…)
Tags: Department of Labor, Federal Minimum Wage, fixed, FLSA, HR, HR news, Minimum Wage, Overtime, payroll, payroll period, payroll week, poster, Sandia, U S, US, US DOL, week, work, work week, workweek
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